Current students studying abroad: Please register your trip with the Study Abroad Office here.
INTL 399 is composed of two components 1) an internship, volunteer work, research, or performing arts experience overseas, ideally the summer before senior fall and 2) a senior fall course where students each analyze a topic relevant to the foreign geographic areas and broad themes they have chosen for their major foci. To do so, students draw on their foreign experiences abroad and materials from prior coursework for the major. Students share their conclusions in written form and a public presentation.
Students are advised to begin preparing for INTL 399, according to the guidelines below, once they have declared the major.
- Create a Google Drive folder and a box/shelf for course syllabi, handouts, readings, and notes from all courses used toward the INTL major.
- Keep a journal when in a foreign country and when working or volunteering in the U.S. on a foreign-related project.
- Keep a list of topics, questions, and puzzles that interest you.
- Attend the preparation meeting your sophomore year. You will receive an invitation by email.
- Plan a foreign experience. The preferred experience is an internship, volunteer work, research, or a performing arts endeavor for three or more weeks in a foreign country the summer before senior year. (Students should contact the International Studies director if this will not be possible for health, family, or legal reasons.)
The summer before your junior year draft a list of opportunities, identify grants, review how to apply for a grant, add grant preparation dates to your calendar, polish your resume, and draft cover letter templates. Students with specific interests should also consult offices at CWRU for additional advice after drafting their lists. Students interested in a U.S. Department of State internship, at an embassy for example, should begin their applications in the summer because the deadline is early fall semester. Note that some summer funding deadlines can be as early as November.
See the tabs above for resources at CWRU that can help you identify opportunities in foreign countries and/or funding for those opportunities. Majors are also encouraged to check web sites of organizations working in their areas of interests.
These offices at CWRU and databases provide information about practicums and finding practicums. The staff at these offices encourage you to schedule advising appointments with them, and they recommend the following web sites.
- Office of Education Abroad (internships, volunteer work, research)
- Education Abroad Staff, meet with the advisor whose expertise best matches your interest.
- Foreign Opportunities: Select summer under the “term” drop down box; intern/co-op, research, volunteer/service learning under “courses offered”.
- Internships, Service Learning & Research Abroad Opportunities
- Center for Civic Engagement and Learning (CCEL) (internships, volunteer work)
- Elizabeth Banks, Director
- Foreign Opportunities: See the International Opportunities section for undergraduate summer program opportunities.
- Additional Foreign Opportunities: Type in the country of interest into the search bar.
- World Teach: Select summer programs and check eligibility requirements
- Amigos de las Americas: Latin America only
- Foreign Volunteering Advice: See the Volunteering Abroad section.
- Vetting Volunteer Opportunities
- ProFellow: Under Fellowship Tips, search International Fellowships and Summer Fellowships
- United Nations Volunteering: Online or onsite
- Office of Post-Graduate Planning and Experiential Education (internships)
- PGPEE Staff, schedule an appointment with the advisor whose expertise best matches your interest by using MyJourney.
- Foreign Opportunities: Create an account and then use the search engines in GoinGlobal, Vault, and Handshake.
- Connect-123: Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Cape Town, Dublin, Shanghai, or Sydney
- CWRU-Affiliated Experiences: Some of these are international.
- School of Engineering
- Engineering internships abroad
- Engineering research abroad: See contact people on this page for advice.
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Engineering Co-op Program (paid employment)Foreign employment can count toward the CWRU Engineering Co-op Program. Students find the position and register through the Co-op Program.
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Additional Resources
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Go Overseas: Use filters when searching to avoid “voluntourism” experiences.
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Cross-Cultural Solutions: Carefully assess whether the program fee is reasonable.
- Arcadia: Use filters to avoid classroom-based excursions.
- Careers in International Affairs (2014, ed. Cressey, et al.): a KSL e-book with a directory of international organizations and helpful advice.
- International Studies Newsletter Archives
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SOURCE (multiple competitions)
Baker Nord Center Research Funding
Baker Nord Center Summer Funding (multiple competitions with single application)
The Rocks (International Studies majors are eligible)
Major/Minor Specific—For those with a second major or a minor
Art History, Art, Classics, Dance, English, Modern Languages and Literatures (a language in the department), Music, Theater (majors and minors)
Anthropology (majors only), Experiential Learning Fellowship in Anthropology
Political Science (majors only), Wellman Hill Political Science Internship Grants
Religious Studies (majors and minors), Reisacher Summer Fellowship
Affiliation Specific–For those who are members
Start the process early, if possible. It is helpful to begin the process of preparing an application for a summer grant or fellowship a few months before the deadline and a national post-graduate grant or fellowship six to nine months before the deadline. An early start allows you to acquire necessary knowledge, make useful connections, receive feedback on your proposal, and obtain strong letters of recommendation. If you did not start early, it can still be good to apply.
Confirm that you are eligible for the grant or fellowship by reading the requirements.
Confirm that the grant or fellowship could meet your needs. Consider to what extent the purpose of the grant or fellowship, the time period, the amount of funds, and other factors meet your needs and also to what extent you can adapt your needs to the funding requirements.
Acquire background knowledge for your work. Undergraduates are not expected to be experts, but do acquire knowledge about your research topic or the type of work you will do. For a research topic, why is it important to study? To what extent has it been studied at all and in the same context? For an internship or volunteer work, why is the work important? If you will work with an existing organization, how effective and reputable is that entity?
Uncover what the funding organization wants. Ponder the stated purpose of the grant or fellowship. Study the selection criteria. Look for any tips the organization provides. Review information about winning proposals. Talk to past winners and read their proposals, if possible.
Define your purpose. State your research question or the purpose of your internship or volunteer work in one sentence.
Develop a checklist and timeline for preparing application materials through careful reading of the instructions.
Draft your proposal/statement.
- Follow any provided instructions about content and formatting.
- Outline the structure of the proposal/statement based on the required structure or mention of necessary components. Add components that you discern are important based on selection criteria. Use that language as subheadings in your proposal/statement. Reviewers tend to read quickly and miss information; make their work easy.
- Introductions should provide (a) a clear statement of your research question or internship or volunteer work purpose, (b) a compelling claim for why it is important, (c) a clear link to the purpose of the grant or fellowship, and (d) a brief description of what you will actually do. Introductions are typically one paragraph for a one to four page proposal or multiple paragraphs for a longer proposal.
- Typically you will then need an additional paragraph focused on of the first three items above (a, b, c).
- Most of the proposal should be devoted to a description of what you will actually do. The underlying purpose of this section is to convince the reader that the project/work is feasible.
- Develop a thoughtful structure for this section. Possible structures include chronological, by location, by type of tasks.
- Woven throughout the structure should be evidence of feasibility. Specifically, you need to provide evidence, through logic or factual information, that
- the time frame is sufficient to complete the project/work
- you have received the necessary permissions/invitations to do the project/work or are in the process of doing so
- you have the necessary research skills (language, data collection, analysis) or work skills (e.g. language, clinical training, teaching experience); if you do not have the skills, then explain how you will acquire them before the start date or compensate for the lack of them (e.g. hire an interpreter, collaborate with an experienced survey researcher)
- you have connections in the location who will facilitate your work
- you have arranged or are in the process of planning accommodations
- you have arranged or are in the process of planning local transportation
- you are knowledgeable about likely hazards and have a plan to avoid them
- were some aspect of the project not feasible you have a back-up plan (typically a single example is sufficient)
- Additional sections of the proposal should address other stated requirements for the specific grant or fellowship (e.g. dissemination of the research findings, sustainability of the project)
- Draft a proposal abstract, if required. The content should be the same, but use different words than the introduction.
- Use terms that the grant/fellowship instructions and funding organization uses.
- Use language that a general audience would understand. Avoid jargon.
- Minimize citations but do cite facts that are not general knowledge or that are others’ ideas.
Obtain and incorporate feedback on your proposal/statement. Obtain feedback from a faculty member who is an expert on the topic, a faculty member who is an expert on the location, and the campus representative of the university or national funding organization. (For national fellowships, consult with Dean Amanda McCarthy at the beginning of the process too.) Provide them with a description of the grant/fellowship objective, selection criteria, and requirements. Faculty and staff are eager to help; they appreciate receiving the background information in a single document and having at least two weeks to review the proposal/statement. Incorporate only that feedback that is consistent with the grant/fellowship objective, requirements, selection criteria and the application guidelines.
Begin human subjects research review process, if applicable. Typically, research that collects information or samples from people and will be published requires review. Familiarize yourself with the CWRU Comprehensive IRB Policy, http://case.edu/research/faculty-staff/compliance/irb/sber-policies/, and then consult with a faculty advisor or mentor to determine whether review is necessary.
Revise your résumé. If one is required, revise your résumé to highlight skills and experiences that match the grant/fellowship objective. Seek feedback on your revised résumé from a Career Center staff person.
Request letters of recommendation, as needed. Ask for letters from people who meet the letter-writer eligibility requirements and can provide first-hand input on how you meet the requirements and selection criteria. Provide them with your proposal; résumé; transcript; a description of the grant/fellowship objective, selection criteria, requirements, and letter submission instructions in a single document; and, ideally four weeks to complete the letter.
Obtain/prepare remaining required items.
Review your checklist.
Read your application aloud to catch any errors.
Have a friend proof your application to catch any errors.
Submit application.
Confirm receipt of application.
Repeat. Apply for multiple grants for a single research project or experience.
BY AREA FOCUS
Africa | ||
Girl Up | Sierra Leone | Geneva Magsino |
Independent Research: Women in the Fishing Industry | Senegal | Leo Ndiaye |
Project Soar | Morocco | Sienna Warshawsky |
Well Told Story | Kenya | Mariam Gardezi |
Asia | ||
Anyang Welfare Center for the Children and AMOS | Korea and Nicaragua | Tobili Hatcher |
DONGHAI International Financial Holdings Company Limited | China | Rong Fan |
DXY (health care industry firm) | China | Clare (Zhuoyun) Yuan |
Independent Research: New Cities | China | Colby Saxton |
National Film Archive of India | India | Anna Koch |
Nepal Reliance Organization |
Nepal | Lilly Tesfai |
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) |
Malaysia |
Liana Kabins |
Qiushi Educational Service Company of Zhejiang University and Translation association of Jiaxing University |
China | Changyi Wang |
United Nations Population Fund |
Japan |
Amelia Harmon |
Volunteer Service Organization |
India |
Marta Baker |
Europe | ||
Aliore Worldwide Workshops | France | Rachel Rider |
American Chamber of Commerce | Slovenia | Eliana Ondrejko |
Associacio Col.lectiu VIO (refugee assistance) | Greece |
Samantha Quinones |
Independent Research: Ethnic and Religious Identity |
Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Israel, Jordan, and Slovakia |
Liz Hanna |
Institute of Economic Affairs |
England |
Dilara Kucuk |
Lex Fellowship | Spain | Aubri Swank |
Melissa Orphanage |
Greece |
Abby McCoy |
REDAngels | Portugal | Zachary Hennessey |
Latin America | ||
Anyang Welfare Center for the Children and AMOS | Korea and Nicaragua | Tobili Hatcher |
Catalytic Communities and Rio on Watch | Brazil | Sarah Adams |
Fundación Belén Educa | Chile |
Zita Gratzl |
Fundación Chacras de Buenos Aires |
Argentina |
Catherine Kozuch |
International Volunteer HQ |
Guatemala |
Maria DeRenzo |
Red por la Infancia | Argentina | Rachel James |
StartUp Chile |
Chile |
Noah Blatt |
Middle East | ||
Independent Research: Ethnic and Religious Identity |
Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Israel, Jordan, and Slovakia | Liz Hanna |
U.S. Embassy and Consulate |
United Arab Emirates |
Sydney Anderson |
BY TOPICAL FOCUS
Global Arts | ||
National Film Archive of India | India | Anna Koch |
Global Business | ||
American Chamber of Commerce |
Slovenia | Eliana Ondrejko |
DONGHAI International Financial Holdings Company Limited |
China | Rong Fan |
DXY (health care industry firm) | China |
Clare (Zhuoyun) Yuan |
Lex Fellowship |
Spain | Aubri Swank |
REDAngels |
Portugal | Zachary Hennessey |
StartUp Chile |
Chile |
Noah Blatt |
Global Environment | ||
Fundación Chacras de Buenos Aires |
Argentina | Catherine Kozuch |
Global Health | ||
DXY (health care industry firm) |
China | Clare (Zhuoyun) Yuan |
Girl Up |
Sierra Leone | Geneva Magsino |
International Volunteer HQ |
Guatemala |
Maria DeRenzo |
Nepal Reliance Organization |
Nepal |
Lilly Tesfai |
Well Told Story |
Kenya | Mariam Gardezi |
International Security & Diplomacy | ||
U.S. Embassy and Consulate |
United Arab Emirates | Sydney Anderson |